New photos added to the Universal Studios/SeaWorld gallery. This includes Universal Orlando Resort, SeaWorld, SeaWorld’s Howl-O-Scream event, and photos from my first-ever visit to the amazing Discovery Cove.
…and I had no idea until I visited and saw it on some banners.
SeaWorld 60th anniversary.
60th anniversary is a bit of a cheat. While the original SeaWorld in San Diego did open in 1964 (making the SeaWorld brand 60 years old), the Orlando park did not open until 1973. Happy 51st anniversary, SeaWorld Orlando!
I suppose this is similar to how Walt Disney World celebrated “100 years” in 2001, based on the birth year of Walt Disney, then later celebrated the 50th anniversary of Walt Disney World.
SeaWorld 60th sign.
You will notice that, unlike the SeaWorld of the past, this SeaWorld does not seem to promote its animal shows at all — just roller coasters and their water/flume ride. More on this later…
SeaWorld entrance plaza sign.
There were some photo signs around the park with specific dates, such as this one about their Sky Tower, which I assume opened in 1975.
There were several others I spotted, but the one I think I liked the most was about their classic water ski show. I remember watching some version of that in the pre-Epcot era of Orlando:
In front of Seafire Grill (well, outside the bar area for it) was this photo, which I suppose is showing what that building used to look like. I have no memories of it from my childhood visits, but it certainly gave me tiki vibes.
There were even tributes to the more recent history of the park during its years under Anheuser-Busch ownership. Though this sign made me sad, because it reminded me I have to pay for beer at this park now.
Speaking of adult beverages, of course there was a specialty drink with a special souvenir cup.
The blue clam shell looking thing on the top of the straw was some kind of dissolving glitter thing that made the cocktail sparkle.
I expect there was more going on throughout the park, but those were the main things I noticed. Unlike Disney, SeaWorld is not set up to have anniversary parades and fireworks and such. I bet their 60th anniversary doesn’t even last 18 months š
But I digress… A quick recap of the history of SeaWorld, taken from the always-accurate Wikipedia entry:
1964 – SeaWorld San Diego opens.
1973 – SeaWorld Orlando opens.
1976 – SeaWorld parks sold to Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. (I know nothing of this, but apparently HBJ owned Cypress Gardens near Orlando which I knew of, but never visited before it closed.)
1978 – SeaWorld San Antonio opens. I grew up in Texas and never visited this park. I did, however, visit the very first Six Flags over Texas near Dallas, and frequented my local Houston park, Astroworld, which became owned by Six Flags.
1987 – There was a hostile takeover attempt!
1989 – SeaWorld sold to Anheuser-Busch, maker of Budweiser. Because, reasons. (Busch Gardens and many smaller complexes were operated by the beer company. In Houston, there was a small and short-lived Busch park, though I only remember us visiting it to see a trained bird show. The park side may have been gone by then.)
2008 – Anheuser-Busch sold to Belgian-Brazilian brewer InBev.
2009 – InBev, who was not in the entertainment business, sold the parks to Blackstone Group. They renamed to SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment.
Which brings us to today where it seems clear the park is moving away from the SeaWorld branding by removing it from the company name, and deemphasizing animal shows in their 60th marketing.
With all the roller coasters the park has been adding — two have opened since I returned to visiting the park in 2020 — I am going to randomly predict that the future of SeaWorld will be a different name, and the removal of the “trained animal shows.” We have already learned that the orcas will not be replaced, so that will leave only the Sea Lion and Otter show and the Dolphin Encounter show.
Perhaps after a few more roller coasters, it will simply be a water-themed coaster park where all the rides feature aquariums and are named after sea life.
We shall sea. Until then, you can browse thousands of my SeaWorld photos taken during my digital camera-era visits:
As of today, March 6th 2024, my Universal Studios-SeaWorld photo gallery now has over 44,000 photos. The most recent ones include SeaWorldās Seven Seas Food Festival and Universal Studios Floridaās Mardi Gras.
New to the gallery are photos from Universalās Endless Summer Surfside hotel – one of the two āvalueā hotels over there. The gallery now includes photos from many of the resorts – Dockside, Surfside, Cabana Bay, Aventura, Sapphire Falls, Hard Rock Hotel.
I did visit Jakeās at Royal Pacific (the first time I ever explored the Water Taxiās) but I do not know where I would have sorted those photos. I also remember having a drink on a rainy day at some outside bar at Hard Rock Hotel, and walking around Portofino Bay one morning, but I cannot find any photos to back that up.
Needless to say, sorting and organizing these galleries is an ongoing project here.
I have now sorted the latest SeaWord Orlandos enough that they are ready to share. This batch includes a daytime visit to the park when family Halloween festivities were going on, and an evening/night visit to Howl-O-Scream. This will bring the total Universal-SeaWorld photo gallery to over 38,000 images.
It will take a few days to get everything processed and uploaded, but when complete, they will appear here:
Photos from this year’s Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Florida and Howl-O-Scream at SeaWorld Orlando will be added to the gallery in coming weeks. We were able to visit all ten haunted houses, the scare zones, and the one (!) show at Universal, and also all five haunted houses, the scare zones and three (!) of the four shows at SeaWorld Orlando.
While Universal’s offerings had zero scares (the only time we heard anyone scream all night was from a chainsaw in a scare zone), they sure were amazing walk through theatrical experiences.
SeaWorld, however, actually had real haunted houses — letting in groups rather than a large conga line. The groups were too big so most scares were spoiled, but we were certainly startled many times during that four hour event (mostly in the scare zones).
Over at my Des Moines Haunted Houses website project, folks there know I scream like a little girl and am a pretty easy target. Seeing these two big theme park haunts be so tame was a surprise — especially with the reputation of HHN being one of the biggest haunt events in the nation.
When I got my first digital camera in 1996, I never could have imagined there would be a time when I’d be updating photo galleries with over 150,000 photos in them. Initially, all my theme park photos were able to fit in one master “DisneyFans Photos” gallery. Today, the number of files in that gallery far exceed what my web host account can allow. Because of that, I had to split the gallery up in to multiple accounts – Disneyland, Disney World and non-Disney Theme Parks.
Due to how much time it takes to update the non-Disney gallery each time I return from Universal and SeaWorld (due to having to go through all the other theme park photos), I am finally going to split off Universal Studios (Hollywood and Orlando) and SeaWorld in to their own sub-gallery.
This will group photos as follows:
Disneyland
Walt Disney World
Universal Studios & SeaWorld
…other Theme Parks
I am in the process up creating the new US/SW gallery (over 31,000 photos just from those parks) and will begin uploading it later tonight. I will then redo the Theme Parks gallery to remove Universal and SeaWorld. Hopefully folks will find them at their new location.
As one of the longest running theme park sites on the Internet (from my pre-domain days back in 1996, to the DisneyFans.com days and now this site), I hate to make big changes like this. Apologies in advance for the links that will be broken…